In
the meantime, corporate leaders can do their part to improve how their
companies communicate. Publics and stakeholders are close agent of
communication in this era. How the organization should handle
its communications in digital age?
Here
are five steps to take into consideration.
Recruit talented
Senior-level
communications executives with solid business skills and deep knowledge of the
company’s products and processes which specializes in corporate communications
and PR.
More
broadly, companies need to give communications chiefs the titles, reporting
relationships, access, and resources to be effective inn the company and that
means investing in senior communications roles for the long-term.
Communications professionals like to tout their ability to be quick studies.
But it can take years to truly know a company's business, and a communications
person without the right level of industry knowledge won't get the respect it
takes to do an effective job. Being the perpetual new kid on the block is a
strategic liability.
Learn to trust and understand the
communications function
Management
can’t get away with listening to its communications leaders with half an ear.
Companies need to learn more about communications and the communications
consequences of their actions and not treat it like a foreign language.
Otherwise, they'll end up spending too much time mopping up after crises as
opposed to preempting them. Not only can that be tremendously expensive, but
communication blunders can do real damage to companies' brands.
Let communications leaders advise
and educate others
If
corporations need to listen better to their communications leaders, then the
reverse is also true. Communications execs need to help other leaders understand
why they are important. Good communications chiefs recognize that one leg of
their job is representing communications to senior management. They can point
to communication wins in that area with the same pride they do to a media
relations victory outside. Companies shouldn't compound their problems by
obfuscating or denying responsibility for problems.
Eliminate command-and-control
communications
The
best companies are transparent, and when they are wrong, they promptly admit it
rather than hide behind corporate speak. Closing ranks can be dangerous in the
digital age, but it's a most common reaction when things go wrong, apologize,
take responsibility, and do what's necessary to right the wrong. Companies
shouldn't compound their problems by obfuscating or denying responsibility for
problems; that simply drags out the story and ensures it will be at the top of
news headlines and twitter feeds for days and weeks to come.
Let employees be ambassadors
Let employees be ambassadors
Don’t
gag them on social media. Smart, far-sighted companies recognize that if
employees are using social media anyway, you might as well tap that power, the
organization should give them information about the company's vision, goals,
and what it's doing, and allow them to spread that positive message online.
They'll have far more credibility among their friends and contacts that your official
brand page ever could.
Mwasandube Aden A.
BAPRM 42638
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